HlM . Forty-flrst Year-No. 29. Price Five Cents. OGDEN CITY, UTAH, FRIDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 3, 19M Entered as Second Clasa' Matter at the Poetofflce, Ogdon, Utah. H iIINITFR ?T4TF? TDftrtP? Tfl PBlflQQ TI-8F ' iflCabinet in Washington Considering the Ad visability of Performing an Extraordinary 5jj Act on Foreign Territory- Mexican . Authorities Desire to Send Soldiers iI Through EI Paso to , Scene s of -Armed Conflict 11 S'Mu El Paso, Feb. 3. Ciudad Juarez, 6' II L Moxlcq, the city across the interna m lip Uonal border from El Paso, npparently t is at the mercy of the Insurgents, who E nre converging to attack the place, if ft and who are reported to he within &v e,,'bt m,les oC tho clLy- "otJce that If theywill fire on the city has been ' ' I served but' according to their declara '' nF tions, their messanger was captured id'. If and '3 being hold a prisoner, no of U I I Nclal notice yet having reached tho W H! frelSu consuls, and 12 hours will be 'i if a,lov;'ed t- olnPsQ bof...

jt Forty-first Yea No. 30-Price Five Cents. OGDEN CITY, UTAH SATURDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 4, 191116 PAGES Entered as Second Class Matter at the Postoffice, Ogden, Utah. H tfflllS A o Greene and Gaynor to Mff be Free Men With j t in a Month .9 m Atlanln, Ga., Feb. 4 Benjamin Greene, and John F. Gnynor, convict- m ed on Uie charge of defrauding the Dof'K government in tho Savannah harbor S ,'K work by the aid of Captain Oberlin M. i mld'K Carter, and sent to the federal pris-, ill M' on' w e rec men w'm a month. B," Tho two prisoners completed their 1 , terras of service in the penitentiary : yesterday and will be at liberty, but R." for tho fine At the end of thirty rfH It days time, they can go before the It UniteJ States clerk at Atlanta, take ICf H' the pauper's oath and go where they 'a If will fl The term of Imprisonment was for 1(J If four years, but the "good service" 8 l time off allowed them, has reduced n, Ir the sentences. Greene, who had been UV Jl ill before his Incarcerat...

H 2 ' THE EVENING STANDARD- OGDEN, UTAH. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 4. I. li "STANTORD, Ky., Feb. S. "A vision from God told mo that ho would rlso H Bpaln." Bald Mrs. Amanda I. Harrison, H In confessing before Judge Balloy this H afternoon that sho worked ull of H Tuesday night digging Into tho grnro H and removing tho casket containing H tho body of George U. Saufloy, tho at- H torney, which was found above- the H ground early "Wednesday. Mrs. Hnrri- Hj son, who was arrested. In a remote H part of Adair county, nearly 100 miles H away, today readily admitted her eon- H nectlon with tho attempted grave rob- H ben and said sho had no accomplices. H Said Had Vision from God. H In explanation of tho story, Mrs. H ' Harrison said that on last Saturday H ' morning she experienced a vision H from God. In which sho was assured H that the attomoy would arise from the H dead if the earth covoring him should H ,he removed. H Confiding her intention to no one, H lira. Harrison went about her plans 1 1...

H J - B THE EVENING STANDARD: OGDEN, UTAH, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 4, .ljljl. SSfe I 3lj lEuating Stott&artu M An Independent Newspaper H (ESTABLISHED 1E70..) PUBLISHED EVERY DAY EXCEPT SUNDAY H (BY WILLIAM GLASMANN.) TERMS OP SUBSCRIPTION IN ADVANCE. H BY MAIL OUTSIDE OF OGDEN CITY. LLX Dally, Every Day, 1 Yoar...$6.00 Dally. Every Day, C Months.. .$3.00 -U Daily, Evory Day, 3 Months... $1.50 Sunday Only, 1 Yoar $2.00 H In Ogden City by Carrier 75 cents per month. -U For information concerning city subscriptions, tolcphono to tho city circulation departmont. Both Phonos DC. H INDIGNATION OF AN OUTSIDE GROCER. H No ono interested in the questions presented by this paper in 1 relation to the "Grocers' Combine ' in Ogden, should fail to read the -U letter of The Ward-Boice company of Rock Springs, Wyoming, ap- H pearing in another part of this issue of the Standard. The communi- H cation is addressed to the proprietor of the paper and came to him mU unsolicited and, therefore, is a vol...

Hi mi f H 6 ' THE EVENING STANDARD' OGDSN, UTAH, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1911. Jfc& I ROCK SPRINGS I ., GROCERY STORE H Manager Writes Letter Condemning the H Course of the Grocers' Combine in H Ogden Ships Goods from Ogden, H - Pays Freight and Then Sells For 25 H ,-oi' Per Cent Less Than Ogden Grocery H Stores Hl r The following is a self-explanatory letter which has an import- H ant bearing on the high prices of the grocery combine in Ogden: H "Rode Springs, Wyo., Fcl2, 1911. H "Mr. Wm. Glasmann. Editor, Ogden. Standard, Ogden, Utnh; H Dear Sir: "I have read with much interest the Examiner o last H Monday and have made arrangemnts to reproduce the entire page in Hl the next issue of the Weekly Miner here. H - "Since you published our advertisement, I have had inquiries Hj from Ogden, asking if we are closing out and going to retire from i business, thus accounting for the low prices. H "No, indeed, we arc not closing out, but just getting started, W changing from a credit busin...

a- par, two l c THE. EVENING STANDARD I s 9 to ie 1 I l, E - , . v . , 1 FORTY-FIRST YEARNO. - 30 ' OGDEN CITY, UTAH, SATURDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 4, mv --. - PRICE pryE CENTS H ora-W II ' : .. - H 3 . .; Dix Morgan ..:-.,,,,r In The .Fighting Engineer f By Captain Fritz Duquesne. 1 rt HE invention ought to save I the railroad companies from -- eighty to ninety million dol ' far3 a year. Why it was not thought 'of before I can't imagine. So far I can find no faults or flaws in the thing. . Instead of tearing up all the ! rails that have cost us $30 a ton, and shipping them back to the mills, and selling them for ten dollars a -g: ! ton, we can use the same rails over S jgain without taking them away from TIE f the track." The consulting engineer njj? j of one of the largest railroad interests H K in the United States was addressing H the board of directors in their of ift f ( J ficcs in the Terminal Building, New 3.1J 'York, and explaining to them the SfrA' Jmeaning of the white drawi...

fft." m - II I m " By MRS OLIVER BELLE BUNCE -M II I IN A KITCHENETTE APARTMENT HOUSE H The Refuge .for Families H 1 On Small Incomes Who H' Would Otherwise Be HI t. Driven to Board- Hl ing Houses THE kltchonetto partmcnts of Now York are tho natural and logical outgrowth or tho demand for H home llfo by popl of somewhat restricted Incomos. They aio coxy nnu H inviting enough to mean homes to pco- Tle who otherwise might be forced Into H hoarding houses, or tho furnished room M ilfe, both of which have many draw- i Wkfl and aro wanting In real com- Hl Tho kilchonotto apartments aro-not H 1 -aeslrned for family occupancy, and do I not Invite ontcrtalnments on any cx- H enarv scale. They vary In stylo and 1 -slue from two to four rooms, not ln- M ! :!udmg tho tiny kitchens from whlcn iH -tbey tako their name, and are inva- M Tlably attractive places owing to their H , imarvolous economy ot space. Indeed, iH lit would nlmoBt eccm as though the 1 -dcslgnors had taken tho dining car as M...

M ,. , , THE -OCDEN STANDARD I 1 gPfHEN ONE COBBLER, CAPTURED A TOWN I jiff QjfjEjjPE-Amazing Exploit of Frederick William Voight,. Whose Daring Deed Made-ttie Kaiser's Army the Latxghjtng Stock of the World . I Iff ' fcif "5? -- Ml If iWH IS ilw ptefWi 1 1 few - few vM II! ft! mSm If xAt ifelMil III r7 sraTWY'w II ' ' ly' I; I Purchased Her Husband's Handsomest I ; Uniform and Donned It I' 1 YHEIT the German village of Koepenick was I ; VV captured single handed by an unknown I man a few years ago and all tlie astound- lr ing acts performed that are hereafter narrated I the whole world was incredulous for a day or so I.' and then a laugh rolled up, beginning in Gcr- I ; many and spreading all around the globe. I ! It was merely m the due course of things that H the man wan sent to prison for four years. Even H the world looked on this very light mindedly, J and it increased liis popularity, if anything. He 2jl: left Germany on his lelease and came to the $M United States by way of ...

hibybybybybybybybybybybybybybybybybybybybybyby i i I . EIGHT STAND ARB 2-YEAK L GMAPE VINES FREE : I WaiaS to Give You These 8 Grape Vines Free TM Is Importamf Hae Graps Vtl&SS We Seed 1 1 H 1 I beHeve that this-is tho greatest offer that has ever been made by any newspaper in the world, fj BU ' - aii- , i. i j .!. t i .irp taken from the eTomid in the Fall, and are kept through the 1 H vidl-imKrantee it to be exactly-as represented. Although we have contracted with the growers for a large are taKen lrom xne SIU1U- . ' 1 ' ... .4. . . . x ,. . Winter in a dry or dormant condition, and are ready for planting in 1 BM : I want to set 2,000 more readers for this paper by March 15. Therefore, I make you this won- 'quantity of grape vines with which to fill our premium orders, J . . J x wwio w go" , i- any section 0f ti2C country when the Spring opens and the frost is i Urf nl offer and if vou are-aot satisfied that it is j ust as represented, I will refund your money every there is a...